Soros Says Commodity `Bubble' Still in `Growth Phase' (Update3)       
 By Saijel Kishan and John Rega
                                                                                
                 April 17 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire George Soros said the boom 
in commodities is still in a ``growth phase'' after prices for oil, wheat and 
gold rose to records.     
        ``You have a generalized commodity bubble due to commodities having 
become an asset class that institutions use to an increasing extent,'' Soros 
said today at an event sponsored by the Centre for European Policy Studies in 
Brussels. ``On top of that you have specific factors that create the relative 
shortage of oil and, now, also food.''     
        Commodities are in their seventh year of gains, with oil rising to a 
record $115.54 a barrel today as the dollar plunged to an all-time low against 
the euro. Rice has more than doubled in a year, while corn has advanced 68 
percent and wheat 92 percent. Investments in commodities rose by more than a 
fifth in the first quarter to $400 billion, Citigroup Inc. said April 7.     
        Commodities have outpaced stocks and bonds this year, spurring pension 
funds and other investors to increase holdings in wheat, gold, copper and tin, 
which climbed to a record.     
        The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index of 26 commodities 
has returned 20 percent this year, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index of 
stocks has fallen 7.3 percent. U.S. Treasuries have returned investors 3 
percent, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes.     
        Soros's comments echo those of Jim Rogers, a fellow founder of the 
Quantum Hedge Fund in the 1970s. Rogers is best known for being a commodities 
bull since the late 1990s, before the market started to rally in 2001. His 
Rogers International Commodity Index has more than quadrupled since its start 
in 1998.     
        Credit Losses     
        The world's largest banks and securities firms have reported more than 
$245 billion of writedowns and credit losses since the start of last year. Bear 
Stearns Cos. last month collapsed after losing the confidence of lenders and 
clients amid the spreading crisis, leading to a planned purchase by JPMorgan 
Chase & Co.    
        ``The whole world is facing a very serious financial crisis,'' Soros 
said. ``I call it the most serious financial crisis of our lifetime and the 
financial system is seriously disrupted.''     
        A week ago, Soros said the seizure in global credit markets caused by 
the subprime collapse will get worse before it gets better. He told reporters 
on a teleconference that regulators and the U.S. administration ``failed to 
perform their job.''     
        He said today that because authorities know how to respond to avert 
financial collapse, ``there's no question of a replay of the 1930s.''     
        Soros, 77, earned an estimated $2.9 billion last year, ranking second 
after John Paulson, founder of New York-based Paulson & Co., according to 
Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine.     
        To contact the reporter on this story: Saijel Kishan in London at  
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; John Rega in Brussels at  [EMAIL PROTECTED]     
                       Last Updated: April 17, 2008  13:16 EDT
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